Ebay bidders with 0 or low feedback
JWMGT90
Posts: 305 ✭✭✭
Do you let people that have new accounts or feedback scores of less than 3 bid on your items on ebay?
Is there a way to not allow this to happen?
Is there a way to not allow this to happen?
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For what it is worth, I've had more success than failure with zero and low-feedback bidders than failures.
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<< <i>Doesn't everybody have to start somewhere? In a bad market, it's makes a lot of sense to welcome new customers, not diss them >>
This should sum it up....
"Because I can"
myurl The Franklin All Old Green Holder Set
60 years into this hobby and I'm still working on my Lincoln set!
Now that they need a credit card etc I find most if not all are ok to deal with. Sometimes theyre a little slow with things. Had one guy who thouroghly believed he would receive items before he paid for them since some mail order outfit did that for him.
Repetition of ignorance is ignorance raised to the power two.
<< <i>Do you let people that have new accounts or feedback scores of less than 3 bid on your items on ebay? >>
Yes!
<< <i>Is there a way to not allow this to happen? >>
Why on earth would you even consider this? If you are selling something for more than a grand, perhaps but just because eBay has been around for a long time does not mean that every new account is someone out to scam you. After all, there are folks out there that are still getting their very FIRST computers/lap tops and that have no internet experience outside of what is available at work.
Too bad the forums have been so rife with whiners and complaints that this is the impression that is given.
The name is LEE!
<< <i>Had one guy who thouroghly believed he would receive items before he paid for them since some mail order outfit did that for him. >>
Hey!!! Don't give eBay any ideas.
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
My collections!!!! : : Photos
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<< <i>Looks like you can only block bidders if they a feedback score of -1 or lower... >>
Of course, if you're strictly a buyer, there's no way to have a feedback score less than 0.
Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution
Recipient of the coveted "You Suck" award, April 2009 for cherrypicking a 1833 CBHD LM-5, and April 2022 for a 1835 LM-12, and again in Aug 2012 for picking off a 1952 FS-902.
My collections!!!! : : Photos
My new VAMmer facebook group! : Silver Dollar VAMmers
<< <i>
<< <i>Doesn't everybody have to start somewhere? In a bad market, it's makes a lot of sense to welcome new customers, not diss them >>
This should sum it up.... >>
I would have to second that .......
<< <i>Looks like you can only block bidders if they a feedback score of -1 or lower. That can be done through the buyer requirements page under your account in My eBay. But, like others have said, there's no reason to block someone with a feedback score of 0 IMHO. >>
Do the above, and 0 doesn't always mean new.
0 could be a +1 and a -1. (at least before the changes, or if the person is also a new seller.)
So, in the settings mentioned above you can also select "block bidders with __?__ unpaid strikes in __?__ days." (don't recall the numbers)
eBay should never, nor will ever allow truly new, with 0 feedback, people to be blocked. Everyone starts with 0 sometime. Accept it as part of the risks of selling.
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
I do block negative feedback bidders. But not 0 or positive.
bob
A lot of them are multiple accounts, they wanted to reload their cashback quotas or get more ebay coupons.
If you're a little worried though, you could always put in the auction "IF you have less than 5 Feedbacks in your history, please contact me to introduce yourself before bidding. unfortunately, I have no way of knowing if your a real person or some 'SPAM-automated-account' and I wouldn't want to cancel your bid and loose a great customer such as yourself"
Yeah, I know I laid it on a bit thick but, you get the idea.
I've had none payers maybe 5 times in my 10 years of selling on and off but never with a zero feedbacker, for whatever reason, my newbies have always paid.
I have had about 25 mid to high level feedback people 'claim' that they didn't receive the coin I shipped, I just send them the tracking number and strangely they just go away and never follow up! Weird huh?
<< <i>For what it's worth, a couple of weeks ago some clown won $5,000 worth of my auctions within hours he/she had registered with eBay (won a few auctions from other sellers also for another few thousand). I contacted eBay about my concerns and they NARU'd him/her the next day and credited my account all fees. >>
Those are usually the exception to the rule, and are "fast shill" accounts. They bid on tons of different auctions to hide the true account they are shilling. A lot of them come from the raw diamond sellers and the like. At least thats where I've traced the 2 times it happened to me to.
Wish some of those idiots could get lined up and shot.
That stuff attracted zero-feedback bidders like flies on spit.
I had to relist it four times; it took a very long time to get that stuff off of my hands. It was worth it if only for the reclaimed space that it was taking up.
Brian
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<< <i>Doesn't everybody have to start somewhere? In a bad market, it's makes a lot of sense to welcome new customers, not diss them. >>
Well ALL started out at ZERO feedback, someone had to trust us, now its up to us the trust the newbies.
TC